Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, August 24, 1913, Image 48

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6 A ST’vnw A.MMllH 'AX ATLANTA, f!A.. SUNDAY, AUGUST 24. 1012. American Hibernians Respond Liberally to Appeal Made After Great Demonstration in Chicago Against England’s Domination. Another Feature of Meeting Was Adoption of a Resolution Con demning Great Britain's Policy Toward U. S. in Canal Dispute. CHICAGO, Aug 23.—Following the, gigantic demonstration for Irish hom* rule at the thirty-eighth annual pic- n:e of the United Irish Societies* of | Chicago, held m Brand* Park, sons of Frin here are confident that in a fev» " eeks American Hibernians will ha"e i Ned a fund that will insure the home rule for which they have fought *o long ar i which they have almost bro iR.it about. Fifteen mouennd perron* visited the park during the day and they re sponded liberally to the call for funds with which to carry on their cam paign Three thousand dollars was raised at that time nnd the fund has grown steadily sin>-e. A feature of the occasion whs the reading b\ James T Clark, [(resident of the United Irish Societies, of a telegram from William Randolph Hearst. in which he warmly favored home rule The preHdent was quick to rrji'y. expressing the thanks of the societies for . ne co-operation they have received in their work from Mr. Hearst’s papers. British Canal Stand Scortd. Another 'niportant feature of the • av was the resolution prepared in advance nnd passed by a unanimous vote, opposing the British contention over the Panama Canal toll* The resolutions strongly uphold the vle'vs of the United States that this country, having built the canal and paid for it without aid. should have the right of pitming her own ships through it without paying tolls, and that this anion of the United States is entirely w’thln its rights as a na tion and is not subject to the crltl- c! -m of any other nation The w *rk of John Redmond, parlln. ment-irv leader, in forcing the home r > M l to the verge of final passage . so was commended highly. <>n° of the most impressive features of the occasion wa*« the exhibition of a full-size model of the statue of Col onel F. Finerty. the famous soldier- journalist and a son of whom Frin is very proud. Colonel Finerty wrote the story of the Custer campaign against old Sit- t ng Bull, and the massacre in which Custer's whole command was wiped out. In his later years Colonel Fin erty was editor of the Irish - American, and devoted all his energies to the home rule campaign, now so nearly won. Work of Irish Sculptor. Tli* splendid statue of the old fight er Is the work of Professor Charles J Mulligan, of the Art Institute a pupil of MacMonnies ami S?alnt-Gaud- dens. Among the speakers who addressed the enthusiastic throng were United States Senator George K. Chamber- lain of Oregon, form» r Attorney Gen eral Maurice T Maloney. P H. O’Donnell. Joseph E Ryan. John T. Sutton, of Lincoln. Neb. and Harry W Smith, of Springfield. Ill In part. Mr. Maloney said "We of the Celtic race have always struggled for a place in the sun. and haw made a good deal of history, hut we have been accused in the past of not be ing quite what we ought to tie in the old country, and did not act to our own interest English misgovern- ment and oppression were solely to blame for this. "Now I can see a new Ireland rising above the horizon, a nation once again The Irish people had advano- I **d with giant strides, now that the long tribulation of our night Is pass ing away " Senator Twists Lion's Tail. United States Senator George F. Chamberlain of Oregon said: M> people came to this country to avoid persecution In the mother country, persecution b> the English Government Ireland had no meas ure of freedom in those times " Speaking on the Panama Canal, he ! said: "We have a perfect right to | arrange to suit ourselves charges on a canal that was made in America, solely by American mono If Eng land will not send her exhibits to the San Francisco Exposition on this ac count I would say let her keep them at home "If we were not careful to wlth- tand these encroachments of the British Government we might in the end find ourselves in the same case as Ireland finds herself to-day. I foresee home rule for that country, within the next two or three years without question of doubt Tight Skirts Make Idle Factory Girls Mil Men Assert Present Styles Cur tail Demand for Goods and Cause Lack of Work NEW BEDFORD. MASS, Aug 23. That the factories manufacturing c’oth are suffering from the present 9 vies women's wearing apparel, owing io the smaller sale of ••loth, and that many opera lives are being ■Town out of wo k in consequence, is the opinion of manv leading New Bedford inanufa turer? in the prat three vears the cir umfu-nce of women's skirts has 1 ep cu do n on the average about o yards. The .-mailer sales of cloih ii ye necessitate.' a Tt ailment in 'he payro ! and h to * t’s of idle opera Irish Societies Leader Thanks Mr. Hearst for Support of Home Rule ( "CORDIAL telegrams of congratulation ami thanks were ex changed between William Randolph Ilea car and James T. Clark, president of the United Irish Societies of Chicago on the occasion of their animal picnic recently. Mr. Hearst expressed l.is belief in the justness and the ultimate success of the cause of home rule, while the head of the Irish societies in his reply earn estly thanked the publisher for his co-operation in their work in behalf of their fatherland. Mr. Clark’s message follows: CHICAGO. Aug. 20, 1913. Hon. William Randolph Hearst, San Francisco. The sentiment of the United Irish Societies toward your pa pers has always been one of appreciation. Often in the past we have admired your unselfish advocacy of the cause of liberty and the 15.000 Irish Americans at the ceremony of unveiling of the John F. Finerty monument were thrilled by your message in fa vor of home rule for Ireland. This monument is symbolic of the revitalized Irish nation that has been the inspiration of Parnell, Redmond and other patriots, and we believe it would strengthen the home rule cause immeasurably if you would publish in your Sunday papers, in the near future, a comprehensive account of our recent demonstration here, and emphasize its significance to Irish liberty. JAS. T. CLARK, President. United Irish Societies. Mr. Hearst’s Home Rule Message San Francisco, Aug. 15. As an American believing ardently in liberty and oppor tunity in equal rights and equal justice, I believe sincerely in home rule for Ireland. If I were an Englishman I would believe with even great er earnestness in home rule not only for Ireland, but for every individual integral part of the British Empire. I would believe in genuine home rule and in general home rule. I would believe in home rule which would insure com plete independence in local government for every state and in a general government which would afford every state equal rights, equal liberties and proportionate representation. Such just and genuine home rule is the best and perhaps the only remedy for the threatened decadence and possible dissolution of the British Empire. The preservation and per petuation of the British Empire in its full prestige and power are only to be found in a voluntary federation of independent states, not held together loosely by compulsion but molded into an imperial entity by the natural and nationalizing forces of mutual confidence, mutual affection and mutual interest. If I were an Irishman I would take pride in this fight for home rule, first because of the benefit I was helping to confer upon my country and my own countrymen, and, secondly, because of the benefit which will inevitably ensue to all other sections of the British Empire and to other nations through out the world. WILLIAM RANDOLPH HEARST. SITU DIETS III IS K[? Girl Wins First Wireless License SAYS WIFE ID ZONE CURL FDR ItlSIfiDSElETO She Installs Her Own Apparatus [eifllTIuLTNWEHE ■OLE WEEVIL UNSEATSULZER Senator From South Carolina De- New York Governor's Foes Call dares South’s Loss in 17 Years Is $1,000,000,000. ‘Perfect Baby’ Fed on Soup and Vegetables Hundred Per Cent Child Also Gets Abundance of Water and Fresh Air. PASSAIC, N. J.. Aug. 23.—"Good, substantial food, well cooked, is what I feed him,” said Mrs. Thomas VVat- terston. of No 110 Central avenue, when asked how she reared her son, Leslie. Just declared the only 100 per cent perfect baby in the "better babies" contest In Passaic. Three hundred Infants contented He ib 27 months old. "He gets soups, fruit, vegetables, puddings, cereals." continued the mother. "I give him very little meat, few eggs, but plenty of water, Inside and out." Baby Leslie goes to bed about 8 I*, m. and arises about 7:30, awaken ing of Ills own accord and bounding out Into the fields before breakfast. He has a two-hour nap every after noon. and always sleeps with the windows in his room wide open. Philippine Hero Can't Re-enlist in Army Batt'e-Scarred Pensioner Rejected by Recruiting Office on Account of Wounds. SPOKAXK. Auk. 23. One of the seven heroes of the t'nlted States army who survived tile bloody mas sacre of Halinglga, P. I., when lie saw more than 100 of his comrades and officers ko to their death at the hands of a savage Philippine tribe, and himself, was mutilated In many places on his body and given up for dead, John M. Newhouse. applied. for re enlist men! In the I'ntted States army Newhouse is 37 years old nnd came from Helena. He is now drawing $30 a month for the Injuries he received in the massacre. Newhouse told of his experience while pleading with local army recruiting officers to take him into the army again. Officials were compelled to reject the applicant on account of a stiff right arm caused by one of the cuts from a bolo. Women Voters Save Mayor From Recall Committee From Their Organization Canvasses Every Ward to Pre vent His Defeat. .JANESVILLE. Wis . Aug 33 Mayor .lam*"* A Fathers whs the vlcior by a narrow margin today In Wisconsin's first recall election of importance tin der the commission form of govern* rrent He was elected by 1*8 votes, with a total of more than 8 00 votes oast, more than weie ever before voted in a Janesville municipal election Mayor Fathers received 1,570 votes and his opponent, John Nichols. 1,472 Fathers carried three wards, the First. Second and Third, those chiefly occupied b\ the church and aristo cratic elements, while Nichols carried the Fourth and Fifth Wards, the homes of the poorer people The election fololws the trouble over saloons six months ago, when the Fathers administration started a cam paign to clean up the town Every ward In the cl»\ was canvassed by women's committees in the interest of Fathers. Standardize Book to Simplify Grammar Lightning Bug Used To Illuminate House West Virginian Discovers New Light Medium Which He Declares Sur- pases Electricity. MORGANTOWN. W. VA Aug 23 Thornton Flowers, of Mora, claims that by treating the common firefly ,,r lightning bug with a secret Chemical process he has produced a light sur passing the tungsten incandescent. | He has his home illuminated with ,.to new light. Several weeks ago. Flowers says he captured an immense lightning bug It gave out a brilliant light and this rh\c him an iden that the light fp>m fireflies would illuminate a room if they were made to glow incessantly He hit upon a mixture of chemicals which, he says, not onlv will retain the glow after the Insert’s life is ex tinct, but will Increase it. He captured the insects bv hun dreds. treated them with chemicals and placed them In globes throughout hi* home Blind Girl Student Marvelous Gardener tducators Work to Have Study of Produces Daisies Three Times Size English Language Made More Uniform. COLORADO SPRINGS. Aug 23 - Standardization of grammatical nomen clature, which will do away with the confusion in the study of English, an well as other languages. In American schools, has been effected by a commit tee of fifteen, of which Profeasor Hills, of Colorado College, was a member. The ommlttee made a report to the National Educational Association in convention at Salt 1-ak? City and its adoption without amendment vlrtua ly insures the fol.owing of tin r commendations in ali schools em .■.••cording to Professor Hills u was I found that in the sentence "John is j good." • word "good" was caned by j committee s >o!s anti ool- .1 tig*- t. will be [> ut nine different Minus tn g atmaurs. th* word Mohn' in 'This is Joint, was '•ailed by nineteen terms, and in We mat'e tohn p’e d»nt " t’ e word "presi dent" was g’vei e ghtetn different » ' In .•! -•*' h mined of Ordinary Flowers and Vege tables Just as Big. i 08 ANOELK6 Aug M Tweet} seven deaf and dumb girls and boy, ranging from 10 to 17, are being tHUght to apeak, read, write stories, sew. make biscuits, solve arithmetic problems, spell and garden at the Sixteenth Street school here, where an exhibition of their work was held recent 1> Mjss Elizabeth Kenealy. 15. is cre ating h sensation at the school be cause of her wonderful success in raising flowers and vegetables In a middy blouse and dark skirt, \ is* Elizabeth works in her gardens. • ne a( home and the other at school, icodu.iing «:■«> «■* three times the - >e of ;h» or inar' flow rs. and heels f in ' i\t • ipe vegetable loo • Continued from Page 1. an isolated spot in Texas until it has now' reached the State of Alabama, and I have been appalled by the dam age wrought by Its ravages. During all these years I have been hoping for tlie discovery by which the pest could be exterminated, or even check ed, but in both I have been disap pointed Likes Zone Remedy Plan. Some time ago the suggestion was made to establish across the entire cotton belt, east of the areas infested by the weevil a zone of 100 miles, in which no cotton should be planted. It Nvas argued that this would check the eastward advance of the weevil, as It subsists only on *he cotton plant, and it was also argued by entomolo gists and other experts on plant and Insect life that my moving this zone westward from year to year all the weevils in the Cotton States would be starved out and entirely exterminated until the Mexican border was reached. The idea appealed to me very strongly, and I have given the sub ject, a great deal of study ever since. I believe this plan is entirely feasi ble, and while at first thought the cost may seem prohibitive, yet when the estimated cost is compared with the estimated saving the zone plan must be looked upon as a very sound business proposition. The Government entomologists, farm demonstration agents and others admit that if this zone plan is put Into operation It will undoubtedly check and finally exterminate the boll weevil, as it will have nothing to feed upon, and they admit at the same time that no other plan that has been tried so far has been at all effective I have had an estimate made of the cost of the proposed zone and I think It Is a very liberal one. It follows: "The cessation of cotton growing over an area of 46,245 square miles, in which the crop is valued at $98,990,047 per annum, Is at first glance such an appalling suggestion that few have even thought to look deeper. Sees Need of Substitute. "We must add also to this the loss in ginning business, which is com puted at $2,915,318 er annum and the loss in seed products totaling $5,633,- 662. This means that there must be com pen.sat ion for a loss in earning value of $107,539,127 per annum. "In the first place, any scheme which would call for the cessation of cotton growing must provide the means and knowledge for growing -ometning else in the place of cotton "A large crop of trained agricul turists instructing In the cultivation • •f new and profitable crops and in the principles of rotation, maintenance of soil fertility, etc., would help the people to double and treble the output of their land within very few years. It would also be necessary to supply seed for planting the 2.373.672 acres of cotton land in other crop*'. Thus the greater part of the prospective doss can be met at a reasonable expense. "The loss of the ginners and part of the loss of the oil men will have to be assumed by the Government. This loss would not exceed $9 000,000. It would be necessarv for the west ern portion of the quarantine area to remain out of cotton for possibly three years. 'East of the proposed quarantine line there lies an area of 112,027 square miles of territory in which cotton <*an be produced. The average vield per acre (1908-18111 for this territory has been 3,051,103 bales (500 pounds), of which 32.892 biles (500 pounds was f*ea island cotton. The value of the latter was $4,224,235. Places Faith in Expert. "The value of the remaining or up land cotton, valued at 11.9 cents per pound, was $174,345,554. The value of the equivalent amount of seed pro duced would be $33,943,532. Thus the annual value of the producers of the crop to he protected is $217,514,211. "History of the boll weevil has shown that if this area is not pro tected its production will be lowered year by year until possibly 50 per cent of the crop is taken, and sometimes as high as 75 per cent.” The zone plan is the onlv sugges tion that has yet been ottered that holds out any promise of relief. The cost of the zone plan is undoubtedly great, but when the estimated cost is compared with the estimated sav ing. the protection of sections not yet reached and the ultimate eradica tion of the boll weevil throughout the entire cotton belt, the cost does not seem to be prohibitive. In fact, the cost of the zone system will be mild compared with the loss that will be entailed if the boll weevil is not exterminated. Sea Island Crop Imperiled. It is practically certain that if the boll weevil spreads to the South At lantic States the sea island cotton in dustry will be wiped out\ entirely. This is by reason of the semi-tropical nature of the islands, the luxuriant foliage which affords a safe harbor and breeding ground for the insects dur ing winter and summer, and the fact that there is neither extreme heat nor extreme cold, both of which are destructive to insect life. It is my deliberate Judgment that if the boil weevil reaches the sea islands, then* will be no more sea island cotton. 1 have spoken of the aggregate loss to the country, but the feature that appeals to me most strongly is the loss to the individual. The coun try may eventually recover from the damage 'done to the cotton crop, but the individual cotton farmer whose income is cut in half or destroyed, and whose property is made to de preciate in value, may never recover. ! The loss to him will be irreparable. My object in writing this is in i order that the people may know Just 1 how seriously the cotton crop is be ing menaced, and that they may dis- I cuss and understand the only plan that has been offered, which promises to accomplish the result needed. If any other plan is suggested that I promises to accomplish the result at j a less cost or in a quicker manner. 1 1 will give it my heartiest indorse ment 1 will glad to have the larm- f rs and others <>f the South con ider this problem carefully and write me what Hi* \ think of it. Wife's Illness a Sham and Confession a Ruse. ALBANY - , N Y. Aug. 23.—Appar ently deadlocked until the High Court of Impeachment meets September 18 to try the charges of high crimes and misdemeanors against Governor Wil liam Sulzer: both the accused Execu- Miss Alice MeConaughy, of Cincinnati, at the key of her wireless instrument. tive and Lieutenant Governor Martin Glynn are busy, the one strengthening his defense, the other preparing to in vigorate his attack. In the meantime, the official business of the Empire State Is at a standstill. The government of New York pre sents a paradox unique to republican government. The State has two Gov ernors, and it has none. Tw o . men maintain they have the right to trans act the State’s business. No business is being transacted. And in this struggle for power, the battle seemingly centers about a woman, a woman who has no voice in the government, who is not even al lowed to vote under the statutes of the State. Wife’s Illness Questioned. In addition to the law point raised by the defenders of Sulzer that he can not be impeached or tried for things he did before he took the oath of office the defense lavs greatest stock on the declaration by Sulzer’s wife that she, not the Governor, used checks he had received as campaign contributions to speculate on the stock mil On t].e other hand, it is learned that the Frawley Uommittee, which brought to light the charges on which the Governor was impeached, will make her confession the subject of ,t rigid examination to shatter, if pos sible.*the defense, which will be based largely on her statement.' In the imaAntime, Mrs. Sulzer. it Is reported, is dangerously ill, her nerves broken, it is said, under the strain which she has experienced since the charges were brought against her husband. Sulzer’s enemies even question this illness. They question it so seriously that it. too, is to be investigated. The first step in this investigation, Both Accused of "Shamming.” The committee believes that "talk ing too much” consisted of telling sto ries of Mrs. Sulzer’s true condition which were not to the liking of the Governor. An inkling of this purpose was contained in an Interview’ with Assembly Majority Leader Aaron J . Levy, who declared: "Not only Is Mrs. Sulzer’s confes sion a sham, hut the pretended illness of Mrs. Sulzer is a sham, of which William Sulzer Is the chief perpe trator.” However, should Sulzer be re moved from office by Tammany votes, with all the judges of the Court of Appeals voting in his favor, he woul 1 count it a vlndicaton and proof of Ills assertion that he is being persecutes because he would not turn over the State to Tammany Hall. ‘Wild Man's'Haircut Fills Bushel Basket Tramp That Frightened Woman and Children Gets Cleaning When Arrested. MILLVILLE. N. J.. Aug. 23 —A "wild man” was reported to the police as roaming the woods west of Mill- tille and frightening women and chil dren Marshal Biggs hastened to the locality and discovered an uncouth man with shaggy beard which CINCINNATI, Aug. 23.—Miss Alice MeConaughy, 13 year old school girl, is the first person to obtain an operator’s license under the new laws regulating wireless telegraphy on the Great Lakes, even if she did get it on something of a fluke. The license was issued Itefore the Inspector discovered that he had failed to notice the age of the applicant, whose father is a national bank examiner of Ohio. I did give them the right age.” declared Alice. "1 sent for the blanks and tilled them out myself.” Her work on the demonstration set was satisfactory. The youthful operator installed her own apparatus at home, doing all the wiring and even erecting the 50-foot aerial. Chester Boynton Sue By Wife for Libel Echo of Famous Litigation Against Rev. William B. Ayres in New Case. BOSTON, Aug. 23.—-Mrs. Helen Ther esa Willet Boynton, of Wollaston, Mass., wife of Chester A. Boynton, who some time ago created a sensational church scandal by suing the Rev. William B. Ayres, pastor of the Park and Down Congregational Church. Wollaston, for ' $10,000 for alienation of Mrs. Boyn ton s affections, has filed a libel for divorce from her husband on the ground.- of cruel and abusive treatment. , Boyr claimed in his suit that the | minis!* , rad broken up his home after I joining the Boynton household as a boarder. Mr. Ayres and Mrs. Boynton In the former’s case of defense de nied all of tin; husband’s allegations and declared that the whole trouble in the Boynton household sprang out of Boyn ton’s attentions to a choir girl at the Park and Down Church, at which Boyn ton and his wife were both prominent members. Boynton lost his suit and was ex- . polled from the Wollaston church. Boyn- j ton is now living at Los Angeles. COUNTY TO GIVE COOK BOOKS TO NEWLYWEDS CHICAGO, Aug. 23.—Leaden biscuits and leather-crusted pies and all the other dinner delicacies of Mrs. Newly- wed soon may cease to cause physical pain and matrimonial estrangement. Their existence is threatened. Authorities of Cook County are con sidering the advisability of giving away official Cook County cook books with all marriage licenses. Robert M. Sweitzer. County Clerk, will present the plan to the County Board. filed suit for divorce from - Anna Speaber in the Circuit Court at La- porte. Ind. Through the machinations of his wife and a man who represented him - rolf as being a magnetic healer, as suming* the name of Louis Odillo, Speabe# avers that they tried to con vince him that he had become a vic tim cf tuberculosis. Odillo then in jected a chemical In his ear. he al leges. which brought on an illness that confine! him to a hospital bed for three years. This, he charges, was done with the deliberate inten tion of causing a fatal sickness to set in and get him out of the way. His wife then sold out his under taking business and their household effec ts, he charges, for less than one- third of the real value. She then re fused to see him after he had been released from the hospital. Friends of Speaber say that he was at one time an inmate of the Elgin State Insane Asylum. But he was re leased later as cured. 7/1 EXPRESS PREPAID Has $13 Salary Cut To $10 to Spite Wife Judge, However, Orders Bookkeeper to Pay Alimony Just the Same. NEW YORK. Aug. 23.—G. Lester i Pinkham. a bookkeeper of Flushing j sued by his wife for alimony, testified j that he was receiving only $10 a week. | His employer. A. M. Ryon, called as a witness, corroborated him. "Is he worth more money?” asked ' the Magistrate. "He certainly is." replied Mr. Ryon: i "formerly I paid him $18 a week, but I he asked to have his salary reduced | t»> $10.” The Magistrate prompt 1 ordered ' Pinkham to pay his wife $5 a week 1 and furnish a bond of $520 to guaran tee payment. TRY IT YOURSELF If not satisfied, ship it back to us and get your money. Our straight 100 Proof Kentucky Whiskey is 100 by Proof—100ft pure, 40070 straight, and will give you 1005° satisfaction. No chance of doctoring, extending or tampering with Old Fort 100 Proof Ken tucky Whiskey, as it is guaranteed under the U. S. Pure Food Law It is good as a beverage—as a medicine-as an all round Family Whiskey. (Other concerns ask $6 to 58 for same kind of whiskey.) WHOLESALE PRICE EXPRESS PREPAID—TWO GALLONS, $5; ONE GALLON, $3 R r ..?5 w i n . 3h iP. express paid, at same price, 100 Proof straight VVtiite Cob Corn Whiskey, guaranteed the finest White Corn Whiskey ever made. Remember this is 100 by Proof—no tampering or extending. Try either brand or send an assorted order- two gallons for *5, Express paid. If not satisfied your money returned A. I_. ALSO BROOK CO. CHATTANOOGA, TENN. Return this adv. -with order for above and _ > bottle of 100 Proof Apple Brandy t rnt Free College Girl Walker Goes 25 Miles a Day Little Pedestrian Reaches Pittsburg on Jaunt From New York to San Francisco. PITTSBURG. Aug. 23.—With a jaunty rose-colored hat, Miss Gladys Mason, a petite New Yorker, who is footing it” from Broadway to the reached to his waist and long hair | Golden Gate, is on her way West. which hung matted over his should ers. When taken to the City Hall the man said he was Waldron Furry, of Low Banks, Canada, and that he was simply tramping. Marshal .Biggs acted as barber for the stranger and his hirsute adorn ment iuled a bushel basket. The little pedestrian left New York on June 29 and has averaged 25 miles a days. Her high mark for a day is 41 miles, made east or Har risburg. Miss Mason is 22. a graduate of Emerson College, Boston. She expects to reaclj San Francisco Thanksgiving Day. Pastor Adopts Wife He Had Divorced Girl Becomes His Ward as Soon as Decree Was Granted by Court. w (•' 1 1 >W A RD. 1 >KL \ . A Ug 23 V divorce on unusual grounds has been granted here to B. F. Willett, who is an ordained Baptist minister, and who ' has served several terms as prosecut ing attorney for the counts. Willett gives up his wife that she may become again, in effect his adop ted daughter Years ago he adopted a little girl who took the name of Clara Willett. He put hej* tn school at Enid. , determined to give her the best educa- , tion obtainable Six years ago. when Clara reached | the Hg«* of 16. Judge Willett made his j adopted daughter his hrdo In his petition for divorce the law yer an«i former preacher set forth that is W’Me” ’ad told h'm she neve*" could love 1 1 • n n w sbo’fld, hut that could be devoted to hiin as a daughter. • and > YOUR ROLL TO ML get the best results you ver had in 8 hours. THE COLLEGE "CO-OP.” Shelley Ivey, Manager. t've mov'd to .1!* and 121 Vachtree Candler Bldg. Special. p S Free development of b-ar* 1 of rolls or narks. My 8-Hour Serv ce. OTTLEY & KNOWLES General Insurance 1508 Fourth Naiional Bank Bldg., Atlanta, Ga. SEMI-ANNUAL STATEMENT For the six months ending June 30. 1913. of the condition of the Svea Fire and Life Insurance Company (Limited) OF GOTHENBURG, SWEDEN, Ofganm.d under the laws of the Kingdom of Sweden, made to the Governor : of the btate of Georgia, in pursuance of the laws of said Sta>e Princimil office in United States. 100 William street vv York \ Y P I. CAPITAL STOCK. Whole amount of capital j Amount paid up in rash I II. ASSETS. I Total assets of the company, actual ash market value in. liabilities. liabilities IV. INCOME DURING THE FIRST SIX MONTHS OF THE YEAR U Total income actually received during the first six months in V. EXPENDITURES DURING THE FIRST SIX MONTHS OF THE YEAR 1913. Total expenditures during the first .- lx months of the year in Greatest amount insured In any one risk.. ' 37 500 (in ^ 3 < 9,1.0.04 *otaI amount of insurance outstanding 3^3 329 00 111 m 17 # STATE OF NEW YORK—Countv of New York Personally appeared before the undersigned M. 1„ Duncan who being duly sworn, deposes and says that he is the United States manager of th* Svea Fire and Life Insurance Company, Ltd. and that ,he foregoing state- . $200,000.00 . . 200,000.00 . .$1,422,807.30 ment is correct and true. L. DUNCAN United States Manager Sworn to and subscribed before me this isth day of August „ EDWIN F. COREA', .. 1 omm issioner for the State of Georgia N”"t“ Of St > ! nt DAN B. HARRIS. Atlanta ueorgta. Name of Agents at Atlanta OTTLEY & KNOWLES.